Introduction

Introduction

Introduction Austin Fisher n many ways, the remit of this book revolves around an obvious Iproposition. The Spaghetti Western, as a transatlantic meeting place, is of necessity a cinematic category to be considered in international contexts, the hundreds of fi lms which the category comprises docu- menting shifts in Italy’s cultural outlook, as the reference points of American popular culture became ever more visible in the post-war years. Yet an Italo-American focus tells only a fraction of a story in which myriad strands of infl uence converged within, and continue to emanate from, this amorphous group of fi lms. Spaghetti Western is a classifi cation constantly in transit between cultures, genres and conceptions of taste, and its patterns of production, distribution and consumption display diverse acts of ‘border crossing’ and translation. By appraising a broad selection of fi lms – from the internationally famed works of Sergio Leone to the cult cachet of Sergio Corbucci and the more obscure outputs of such directors as Giuseppe Colizzi and Ferdinando Baldi – this volume seeks to reconsider the cultural signifi - cance of the Italian Western, its position within global cinema and its continuing trends of reception and appropriation around the globe. Scholarly volumes are always at pains to stress their timeliness in rela- tion to trends within their broader disciplines, and in this respect this one is no different. What Mette Hjort has termed Film Studies’ ‘transnational turn’ (2010: 13) highlights a desire to understand the ways in which cinema has offered a means to document the movement of peoples and identities across perceived cultural and spatial boundaries. A medium whose development through the twentieth and twenty-fi rst centuries has coincided with a marked historical fl uctuation of inherited borders, cin- ema has been pertinently described by Tom Conley as ‘the privileged geopolitical medium . at once local and global’ (2013: x). Thus, what might at fi rst appear to be a merely modish application of ‘trans-’ pre- fi xes – ‘transnational’, ‘transcultural’, ‘translocal’ – in fact signifi es wider 44944_Fisher.indd944_Fisher.indd 1 331/10/151/10/15 55:55:55 PPMM 2 austin fisher historical approaches to cinematic output that scrutinise nationally- constituted discourses and thereby seek to understand the complexities of specifi c cultural-political moments. Even such a seemingly nationally- based discipline as Italian Film Studies increasingly embraces these con- cerns, recognising and interrogating the unstable, movable nature of the ‘national’ referent in a globalised era, and thereby questioning notions of a local industry talking to or for its nation state. The Journal of Italian Cinema and Media Studies, for example, introduces its inaugural edition with a mission statement that places Italian cinema ‘within the realm of a post-national and trans-cultural debate . transcending geo-ethnic land and sea borders and moving away from merely celebratory local cinematic experiences’ (Laviosa 2013: 4). Such undertakings are also characteristic of recent scholarship around the Western genre, whose well-worn tropes are increasingly studied for how they have been decoupled from their supposed roots in US culture. Multifarious strands of international Westerns are being repositioned within a polycentric cultural landscape (rather than one approaching the USA as the genre’s ‘centre’), revealing the Western to be a malleable space of cultural blending that has traversed national and political boundaries. Recent research into how the genre has obtained diverse meanings upon contact with particular historical, cultural and political contexts includes volumes edited by Miller and Van Riper (2013), Klein et al. (2012) and Higgins et al. (2015), along with special journal editions of Frames (Iverson 2013) and Transformations (Cooke et al. 2014). As Miller and Van Riper explain, issues central to the Western’s dynamics such as imperialism, industrialisation, the relation- ship between individual and community, and the rights of indigenous peoples are not unique to the USA or to the late nineteenth century: ‘They were, and are, part of the shared experience of all expansionist nations, and the international appeal of the Western rests, in part, on the potential for the historical experiences of one culture to resonate with audiences from another’ (Miller and Van Riper 2013: xiv). The approach summarised in the quotation above makes a valu- able point about the genre’s cross-cultural appeal, but still positions the Western genre as one that originated in the USA, to then be embraced and adapted by other cultures: ‘a genre with its roots on the late- nineteenth-century American frontier . relocated to other frontiers’ (Miller and Van Riper 2013: xvi). Neil Campbell goes a step further down this transnational route, arguing that ‘the West’ breaks away from notions of ‘rootedness’ in the USA altogether, constantly renew- ing and transforming itself in various cultural forms. Campbell applies Mary Louise Pratt’s notion of interlocking ‘contact zones’ to escape 44944_Fisher.indd944_Fisher.indd 2 331/10/151/10/15 55:55:55 PPMM introduction 3 approaches that identify a single point of generic origin: ‘To examine the West in the twenty-fi rst century is to think of it as always already transnational, a more routed and complex rendition, a traveling concept whose meanings move between cultures, crossing, bridging, and intrud- ing simultaneously’ (Campbell 2008: 4). Indeed, this line of enquiry is now fl ourishing, with recent scholarship following Campbell’s lead by examining how the Western narrative format and its various iconogra- phies have been deployed for the negotiation of multifarious national and sub-cultural identities since before Hollywood’s golden age. To cite just a few notable examples, this includes studies of pre-World War I Westerns shot in the French Camargue region (Wessels 2014), socialist- era Hungarian Westerns (Simonyi 2013), Latin American ‘Third’ West- erns (Wessels 2015) and Australian outback Westerns (Cooke 2014, Wessels 2014). Such approaches allow for a broader picture to emerge: one of alternative trajectories from generic building blocks, which emerge from no single point of origin and thus result not in Ameri- can Westerns and copies of (or reactions to) American Westerns, but instead countless global offshoots of a format that has by the whims of historical circumstance become known as a ‘Western’ due to the eco- nomic hegemony of the USA in the fi rst half of the twentieth century.1 By focusing on the globally-oriented origins and legacies of Westerns produced or co-produced by Italian studios, this volume seeks to engage with these evolving fi elds of enquiry, addressing routes of cultural, polit- ical and ethnic relocation that lie at the heart of the ‘Spaghetti’ Western phenomenon. By analysing these fi lms’ processes of production, distri- bution and consumption as sites of dynamic cultural exchange wherein supposed boundaries become blurred, the book aims to widen the socio- historical debate around this much-loved fi lone.2 It is for precisely this reason that this volume does not reject the USA as one of its contex- tual reference points (as do Miller and Van Riper, for example, whose remit is ‘Westerns produced outside the United States’ (2013: xvi)), since this would paradoxically serve to perpetuate a US-centric perspective by dividing the Western into ‘American’ and ‘others’. If, as Campbell argues, the Western was never fi rmly moored to US national experience in the fi rst place, then the Spaghetti Westerns must be considered a con- stituent part of this continuum, rather than an anomalous reaction to a founding text. Though the Italian Western has become one of the most culturally visible variants to contemporary eyes, it is nevertheless one of many manifestations of an innately transcultural genre. In my own past work on the Spaghetti Western (Fisher 2010, 2011), I approached the fi lms as historical documents, following well-established fi elds of academic enquiry that analyse fi lm’s role 44944_Fisher.indd944_Fisher.indd 3 331/10/151/10/15 55:55:55 PPMM 4 austin fisher in negotiating, questioning and shaping conceptions of the past and its relationship to the present.3 I specifi cally investigated the con- nection between the politicised strands of this fi lone that emerged in the second half of the 1960s and the contemporaneous ideological ferments that were erupting in Italian factories and university cam- puses, in response to global events in the various theatres of confl ict at the height of the Cold War. The function of such fi lms as A Bullet for the General (Quién sabe?, Damiano Damiani, 1966), Face to Face (Faccia a faccia, Sergio Sollima, 1967) and Tepepa (Giulio Petroni, 1969) was, for the purposes of my study, one of registering the imme- diate concerns, confusions and confl icts of the fi lms’ time and place. Yet, particularly given the extraordinarily long and infl uential recep- tion tail of the Spaghetti Western, such an approach raises an impor- tant question: if this fi lone is indeed to be read as a document of ‘time and place’, which times and which places? The immediate concerns of 1960s and 1970s Italy are certainly pivotal to an understanding of these fi lms’ cultural-political signifi cance, but so too are their varied antecedents and legacies in Italian neorealism, French comic books, Japanese chanbara fi lms, Bollywood, Eastern Bloc fi lm distribution and the contemporary cinema of Quentin Tarantino.4 It is to be hoped that, by examining these and other disparate contexts, this volume will go some way to enriching our comprehension of this broad vista. This is by no means to say that scholarship on the Spaghetti West- ern has hitherto been manacled to the concerns of a narrowly Ital- ian milieu: far from it. Dimitris Eleftheriotis infl uentially approached this fi lone as one that highlights ‘the accelerated mobility of cultural products around the world and their increasing detachment from national contexts’ (Eleftheriotis 2001: 98).

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